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Into Enemy Land

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  1. Sunkin’s Wrath Enemy Guide

 

“What is he doing there?” I asked Tío Ramiro as soon as the branches of the trees had hidden us from the soldier.

“He’s probably watching the bridge. From where he stands, he must have a clear view of the river beyond the upcoming bend. According to your report, that is where the bridge is.”

The fact that my father had left sentries to make sure no one crossed over the river was less surprising than the fact that we had not considered that possibility.

I sulked. “What are we going to do now?”

“Haven’t you heard anything I have been telling you? First we must wake Don Julián so he can join us in the discussion.”

To prove to my uncle how unwanted his criticism was, I bent over the sleeping king and gently shook his shoulder. With the swiftness of a wild cat, Don Julián turned and pushed himself up on his right arm.

“Sire.”

Don Julián looked up. For an indefinite moment he stared at me, his eyes dark and cold like mountain lakes, reflecting mine. Then as I was about to turn away, his pupils yielded under my gaze and he smiled.

Holding me aside,Tío kneeled by the king. “We must talk, Sire. The river is under surveillance.”

“Don Andrés’s men?”

“I’m afraid so. We just saw one up the hill, watching over the river. We cannot pass by him unnoticed.”

“I see.” Don Julián shifted his weight and rested his back against the side of the boat, his gaze lost in the distance.

“But we cannot go back,” I said over Tio’s shoulder. “We cannot cross the river farther down; it is much too wide. So we must get to the soldier and take him prisoner before he can alert Father.”

Tío Ramiro rolled his eyes, “Would that be all, Andrea?”

“It is an excellent plan, Princess,” Don Julián said, “if we knew for certain we are dealing with a solitary soldier. But as I don’t believe that is the case, and we don’t know where the others are–”

“But it is the only way. I–”

“It is out of the question,” my uncle cut in. “I have never hit a man in my life, and I’m not going to start now.”

Don Julián nodded. “As for me, Princess, I cannot fight either. Doña Jimena wouldn’t approve.”

“I will do it then,” I said, getting up. But my uncle grabbed my arm and pulled me down.

“We appreciate your offer, Princess,” Don Julián said, “but there may be another way.”

Without letting go of my arm, Tío turned to him. “Your Majesty?”

“I was wondering whether you still have the letter Doña Jimena gave to us.”

“Yes, Sire, I do. But the letter says–”

“What it says is irrelevant. We may safely assume the sentinels cannot read. You will read it to them.”

Tío Ramiro frowned. “And it will say...”

“That Don Andrés orders them to join him at once. Of course, you will have to improvise some story about robbers stealing your horse to explain your unexpected arrival.” Don Julián paused for a moment, and after glancing critically at Tío, he continued. “In your present condition, I don’t think you will have any problem convincing them.”

Tío laughed. “I guess you are right. I could certainly use a bath and new clothes. But at least I don’t have a hole in my shoulder.”

“Touché.” Don Julián smiled. “Do you agree then?”

“I do, Sire. I think it’s worth trying.” Then turning to me, “Andrea, do you think you can take the boat to the other shore on your own?”

“No, she can’t,” Don Julián answered for me. “The current is strong in the middle. She will need my help to steer the boat.”

“Then, Your Majesty, I cannot leave. Because if you row, Sire, your wound will open again and... what is the use of taking you to your men if you die before reaching them?”

Don Julián nodded. “Princess Andrea will row.”

Tío got up and bowed to the king. “It would be a great honor to see you in my world, Sire.”

“The honor will be mine,” Don Julián said. And although he was sitting, he seemed to be looming high over my uncle.

“Remember that Don Julián is hurting, Andrea,” Tío whispered in my ear as he hugged me. “So please take care of him. Let me be as proud of you as I’ve always been.”

Without waiting for my answer, he jumped overboard and disappeared through the hanging branches of the weeping willows.

 

After Tío Ramiro left, I had the strange impression that the boat had grown smaller or that the king had moved closer. I knew, of course, that nothing had changed. Except for the fact that now, without Tío between us, I had to deal with Don Julián directly and first of all apologize to him for my previous outburst. And I was not ready. To bide my time, I looked at the shore where the willows were still weeping under the golden light of Athos and then back to the river that touched both kingdoms. But finally, like iron is drawn to a magnet, my eyes returned to the king.

Don Julián, sitting still against the stern, was watching the shore with the deep concentration of a hound about to pounce on its prey. Except for his left arm folded at his chest and the sling under his elbow, nothing in him spoke of illness. And the doubt returned. Was he really hurting as Tío had said, or was he just being arrogant when he had asked me for water?

“Does your wound hurt, Sire?” I heard someone asking, and although I knew it had to be me, the voice was not mine.

Don Julián turned and stared at me. “Not at all, Princess,” he said. “I just like the attention.” But for a brief moment he had hesitated, and in spite of my desire to believe him, I knew he was lying.

“You must tell me the truth, Sire,” the alien voice said.

Don Julián looked away, and for a while only the splatter of water against the hull filled the silence. Then just as I was about to apologize for my intrusion, he turned again to me and whispered, “Yes,” as if it was the most difficult word he had ever said. “Yes, Princess. It does hurt.”

“I’m... sorry.”

“Do not be, Princess. I am used to it. Besides, I’m getting better.”

“But when you take the pills, it does not hurt anymore, does it?”

Don Julián frowned. “Do we agree that this is the last question I will answer on the subject?”

I nodded.

“The truth, Princess, is that it hurts all the time. When I take the medicine, the pain becomes... tolerable.” He paused for a moment and bent toward me. “But why do you want to know? Are you planning to get yourself an arrow?”

“No. I mean... It is just that... ” I hesitated. I could not tell him I had asked because I was sick and tired of waiting on him, because I wasn’t even sure it was the truth anymore.

“I do not know why you are asking, Princess. But I assure you, you must not worry about me. Tomorrow I will be with my men, and in two days I will meet with Don Andrés. Your plan will succeed.”

“It is not only my plan I’m worried about.”

Don Julián smiled. “Is it not? Are you sure you are not doing all this so your name will be sung by the troubadours as the beautiful princess who halted a great war?”

As I looked away to hide my smile, the clear neigh of a horse came from the shore, relieving me of the need to answer. Soon the beat of hooves followed. My uncle has done his part well. The soldiers were leaving. I moved to untie the boat.

“Princess,” Don Julián’s voice stopped me, “remember. We must wait.”

He was right. It was I who had told them the path followed the river for a while before heading inland. And so we had agreed to wait to give Tío and the soldiers time to leave the shore. Half an hour would do, I said to myself, looking at my watch. Above the golden moon half visible at the left of the blue dial, the two hands were together, pointing up. It was midnight: time for Don Julián to take his medicine. I took two pills from one of the leather bags lying at my feet and offered them to him.

Don Julián did not move. He was looking at my hands, at my tanned hands covered with blisters. They were not the white soft hands of a coddled princess, I knew he was thinking. Not the hands of my sister Margarida and definitely not Rosa’s. Ashamed, I pulled them back and, trying at least to hide my broken nails from his piercing stare, closed them tightly.

“You should take care of your blisters, Princess,” Don Julián said, and although I looked for criticism in his voice, I could hear only concern. Bending forward, he opened my hand and took the white pill from it. This time he did not have to ask. Reaching down, I grabbed the goatskin and helped him to drink. Then I offered him the red pill.

Don Julián shook his head. “No, Princess. I would rather not have it now.”

“But you said before–”

“When I take it, I cannot think straight. And we are not safe yet. I promise I will have one as soon as we get to the other side.”

I was returning the pill to the pouch when Don Julián added casually, “Princess, if you don’t mind, I think it would be safer if I carry them on me.”

I thought for a moment. His request made sense. Nobody should see the pills because they were from my uncle’s world. If given the chance, Don Julián’s men would search the bags, but they wouldn’t dare touch their king. In silence I handed the pouch to him. For a moment he held it in his right hand as if considering what to do. Then he looked at me. “I’m afraid, Princess, that I need your help,” he said, pointing at his immobilized arm.

I nodded, and kneeling by his side, I tied the strings to his belt. My fingers were clumsy, and it took me forever to finish the knots, not only because my blisters hurt whenever they touched the leather, but also because being so close to Don Julián made me feel uneasy. Which was indeed strange after all the time we had spent together in the boat, not to mention the interminable days in the castle. But something was different now. My hate, I realized, was gone.

When I finished, Don Julián kissed my hand. Unable to hold his stare, I looked away. And as I did, my eyes rested on my watch. In a sudden impulse, I took it off and offered it to him. “You should keep the time reader, Sire, so you know when to take your medicine.”

Don Julián didn’t argue. “Thank you, Princess.”

He stayed still while I hid it in his pouch. Then he moved back and leaned against the boat, his eyes on the shore.

I returned to my seat and, bending over the river, submerged my hands in the cool water. After I had rubbed some salve on the blisters and wrapped a bandage around them, I untied the boat. Fighting the tears that welled up in my eyes when I grabbed the oars, I steered the boat into the stream. Soon the hill where I had seen the soldier came again into view and glided away as the river took a sharp bend north.

The pain in my hands had faded to a dull ache, when Don Julián, who had been sitting still at my feet, jerked himself up. Holding to the stern with his right hand, his face tense with the effort, he was staring upriver with the lost look of a zombie. Under us the boat rocked.

I stopped my rowing and looked back. I recognized the place. It was from this very spot that I had taken a last glance at the battle the day Don García’s men had attacked. Only the bridge remained. The shining stones that had taken my breath away the first time I had seen them had turned black with the smoke, and the wooden rail was gone. As I looked at the broken remains, a great sadness overcame me. Regardless of its purpose, the bridge had been a beautiful thing, and now it was gone.

Slowly, we reached the bridge and continued farther upriver. The bridge was only a dark speck in the distance when Don Julián told me it was time to cross. I nodded and, following his directions, steered the boat toward the distant shore of Alvar.

As Don Julián had predicted, the current got stronger midriver, and although I was rowing with all my might, we were drifting downstream. I was wishing Tío Ramiro were there when I heard a blunt noise under the hull. I knew we had hit a rock. Although it was not a big blow, it was so unexpected that I dropped the oars. The boat began swirling out of control.

Before I could react, Don Julián sprang to his feet. Pushing me aside, he took the oars and straightened the boat with skillful strokes. Then he motioned me back. Handing me one of the oars, he asked me to help him get the boat ashore.

I nodded, ashamed of my weakness, and resumed my rowing.

As soon as the hull touched bottom, Don Julián jumped into the shallow waters and tied the boat to the naked roots of an old poplar tree. Without looking back, he clambered up the steep slope and started walking upstream through the thick shrubbery flanking the river.

I scrambled to my feet and, tossing the bags over my shoulders, climbed after him. But the bags were heavy, the ground slippery, and I lost my footing and fell splattering into the mud. By the time I got up again, Don Julián was gone.

Dirty and angry, I dragged myself out of the mud and up the slope, following the trail Don Julián had left. At the beginning, the path–a narrow trail of trampled leaves and broken twigs–ran along the river, but after a short while, the bushes on my right thinned and the path bent inland. And when I turned as well, I found myself looking into a clearing, an open expanse of grass and heather glowing softly in the golden light of Athos. The king was nowhere in sight.

More surprised than worried, I glanced to the distant trees that closed the field, wondering if the king was already there. But Don Julián had not had enough time to reach the trees, unless he had run. And Don Julián could not run.

It was only then that the significance of the entire incident struck me. According to Mother, Don Julián was too weak to walk. Yet he had helped me to row. Something was wrong. Had he lied to us? But why? And where was he now?

In the middle of the opening, a rocky outcropping projected long shadows on the dense scrub. As I moved closer, I saw the dark figure of a man half‑hidden behind one of the boulders. I ran to him as fast as my weary legs allowed, but the king didn’t move.

“Are you all right, Sire?”

Don Julián turned. “You’re dismissed, Princess.”

“But, Sire–”

“As you have just demonstrated, Princess Andrea, you are of no help to me. In fact, your arrogance and inexperience will only jeopardize my mission. We are in my kingdom now, and you must obey my orders.”

He had spoken with the authoritarian voice of our first encounters, reverting to the king I hated so much. Astounded at the virulence of his unexpected attack, I stared at him.

“Haven’t I made myself clear, Princess?” Don Julián continued, his voice a cold whisper. “I refuse to suffer your contemptuous behavior any longer. I order you to leave.”

At his words, from somewhere inside my fear, came the memory of the promise he had made when delirious in the castle, the promise to avenge his father. He had meant it. Don Julián had never intended to negotiate with Father. He had only used that claim as an excuse to get to his kingdom. And now that he had gotten his wish, he would turn on us. Blinded by rage and tears, I bit my tongue to stop my crying and ran away from him.

I ran across the heather, through the brushwood, and down the slippery slope into the water until I reached the boat and climbed inside. Only then, I saw the blood. Red rusty stains over the oar, on the seat, and on the floor, a dark cloud of insects gorging on it. For a moment I just stared, my mind refusing to understand. Then, as the now familiar scent hit my nostrils, a wave of nausea overcame me, and bending over the river, I was sick. And when there was nothing left in my stomach, I climbed to the shore again and started back toward the opening. Excuses were over. Neither my hate for the king nor his disdain for me would change the fact that if I left him now, I would be as responsible for his death as if I had killed him myself.

I found Don Julián sitting under the boulder where I had last seen him. I noticed he had taken his shirt off and was trying to cut the bandage with a knife. Both the knife and his hand were red with blood. Strain and frustration showing on his face, he was biting his lower lip so hard that it was bleeding.

I curtsied to him, still afraid of his anger, and pretending a confidence I did not feel, I asked, “May I help, Sire?” as if he had never insulted me, as if I had never left.

Don Julián dropped his knife, startled. He could not totally hide the pain in his eyes. Distressed by his silence and thinking that my losing control of the boat was the reason for his contempt for me, I started to apologize. But Don Julián did not let me finish. “It is I who has to apologize, Princess, for my clumsy attempt to make you leave. Although I did it so you would be safe, I hate myself for what I said.”

“Then, Sire, you didn’t mean it?”

“Of course not. But if you believed me, why did you come back?”

“The boat is covered in blood,” I jested. “I didn’t want to get dirty.”

Don Julián smiled. “In that case it’s better you don’t get near me until I’m finished.”

Ignoring his request, I knelt by his side and helped him undress his wound. When I realized that the blood was still coming, a wave of panic grew inside me.

“You shouldn’t have rowed, Sire,” I told him to cover my fears.

“You are probably right. But there are so many things I should not have done that one more does not make much of a difference.” Then, as I pulled off the last of the bandages and the blood poured out like a stream from his shoulder, he fell back against the rock, unconscious.

I laid his body on the grass, and taking a linen cloth from the bag open at his feet, I pressed it against his wound. When it turned red, I grabbed another one and then another. Only after the bleeding stopped did I dare to look at the king. His pulse was irregular, but at least his breathing was steady. After taking two red pills from the pouch hanging from his belt, I smashed them in a cup, added some water, and forced them into his mouth. I washed his wound, wrapping a bandage tightly around his shoulder.

I dressed him with his own shirt, the one he had been wearing at the bridge. Now that we were in his kingdom, he did not need to pretend he was one of us. Once I was finished, I covered him with a blanket, and my back to the boulder, I stood watch.

 

Dawn was breaking over the distant trees when I woke up. Don Julián, his eyes closed, was breathing slowly at my feet. Bending over him, I touched his forehead. It was burning. But when I checked his bandage, I saw with relief that it was only slightly stained. After forcing some water through his parched lips, I collected the dirty bandages and started for the river.

On my right, the sun crawled out of hiding. It was the last day before the meeting with Father. Don Julián was barely alive. In two days’ time he would still not be well enough to talk with Father. My plan had failed.

Unless... My mind started racing. I still had the letter with the conditions for peace signed by Don Julián. All I had to do was to find Don Alfonso and give the letter to him. Then Don Alfonso would show it to Father, and my worries would be over. I jumped to my feet. Don Julián would know where to find Don Alfonso. I would ask him and then... But there was a big flaw in my plan: Don Julián could never make it to Don Alfonso’s camp. He would bleed to death if I moved him now.

“I will have to go alone.”

Startled by my voice, a couple of ducks looked up, their unblinking eyes searching the shore for danger, and then they went back to preening their feathers.

“I will have to go alone,” I repeated. But the idea of leaving Don Julián sent a fear beyond reason into my heart. My back to the tree, I let myself slide to the ground. Above the steady sound of rushing water, I heard the cracking noise of a twig breaking, then the sound of wings taking flight. And as I turned, a familiar voice whispered in my ear. “Good morning, Princess. As always, it’s a pleasure to see you.”

Almost touching mine, Don Alfonso’s face was looking down at me. Although his lips were drawn into a smile, the sharp point of his sword against my throat belied his words.

 

The New King

 

“Where are your soldiers this time, Princess Andrea? Are they waiting for your signal to cross the river?” Always the gentleman, Don Alfonso’s voice was firm and pleasant. But his eyes, cold with hate, were not asking. And by the pressure of his blade on my skin and the shadows of the men I could guess were behind him, I knew I was in no position to provoke him.

Don Alfonso moved back. “Why did you return? The truth, Princess, or your man will die.”

“No!”

They had found him then. They had found their king but had not recognized him. Just my luck. If I did not stop them, these stupid soldiers would kill their own king and blame me for it.

Lunging to my feet, I turned toward the clearing where I had left Don Julián. But before I could move further, a black wall of Suavian soldiers had closed in on me. Again Don Alfonso’s sword grazed my neck.

“Easy now or I’ll kill you both,” Don Alfonso said. I knew by his voice that he had moved to a place beyond reason, and he meant it.

Forcing the anger from my eyes, I stared at him. “You must listen first, Sir. Peace is still possible.”

Don Alfonso laughed. “Peace? How do you dare talk of peace with the blood of my brother still on your hands? You should have thought about it before, Princess. Before your men killed my brother.” His voice was cold now, tense like the string of a bow under an archer’s hand. And just as dangerous. “Don Julián was a great man, and he died because of you. His death will forever divide our kingdoms.”

“Last time we talked, Sir, you didn’t have such a high opinion of your brother. Besides–”

Don Alfonso snarled. “You may well get the credit for my change of mind, Princess, if that makes you happy, as your treason was the cause.”

“–Besides, Don Julián is not dead.”

“You would say anything to save your life, wouldn’t you? But this time it will not work.”

His sword was cutting my skin, and as I tried to move away, my back hit the tree. There was no place to go. “Don Julián is alive,” I repeated. “He’s here with me.” But the time for talk had passed. Don Alfonso moved his hand slightly, and the blade came down like a burning fire onto my chest.

“Let her go.”

The king’s voice, harsh like thunder, exploded in my head. And when it died, as suddenly as it had started, the pressure of the blade was gone. But not the pain.

Bright points flashing before my eyes, I reached for the front of my tunic, a warm and sticky liquid dripping through my fingers. “Do you believe me now?” I screamed, half‑blind with pain and fear.

Don Alfonso, his handsome features frozen in hate, returned my stare unflinchingly. “Our conversation is not over, Princess,” he said in a cold whisper. But I noticed with relief that his men were no longer pointing their arrows at me. As the surprise in their faces turned to awe, they dropped their weapons and kneeled to their king.

Over the bent heads of the men, Don Julián’s eyes met mine and held them with the arrogant stare I had grown to know so well, but when he spoke, his words were for his brother. “Don Alfonso, bring Princess Andrea to me.”

With the tip of his sword, Don Alfonso motioned me forward. I did not need the encouragement. I remembered all too clearly how the blood had poured from Don Julián’s wound the previous night. I also knew what would happen to me if he collapsed before he could talk to his brother. Ignoring my own pain, I ran to the king’s side.

Don Julián nodded at me. “Princess,” he said and then turned to Don Alfonso. “You must listen to Princess Andrea. She will...”

I jumped forward, arms outstretched, and grabbed his body as he stumbled. His eyes closed, his breathing coming in halting gasps, he rested his head against my shoulder and moaned in pain as if he were beyond care. And once more, the cold of a metal blade was on me.

“Don Julián is wounded, Sir,” I said without turning. “To kill me will not change anything.”

The blade moved away. “What happened?” Don Alfonso asked. His hands, already bare, were helping to lay the king on the ground. Don Julián did not fight, but opened his eyes and whispered, “Do not harm her. It’s an order.”

Don Alfonso nodded, but before he could answer, a cry of alarm broke through the silence. Beyond the line of the trees, I saw the dark shapes of men. By the white stripes that flashed here and there across the shadows and the glint of the sun against metal, I knew they were soldiers. My father’s soldiers.

Yet it could not be. Tío had said Father had agreed to suspend all hostilities until he had met with Don Julián. What were his men doing in Suavia then? Had he broken his word?

Certain that only a word of command lay between me and death, I waited for the arrows to come. Instead, an imperative voice called the soldiers to a halt. The imposing figure of my father moved forward, sword in hand, into the clearing.

“Don Julián!” he shouted. “You summoned me to your kingdom with the promise of peace. But you failed to mention that my daughter’s life would be the price. You were wrong to assume I would let my love for her stand in the way of my duty. I will not negotiate with you under these circumstances. The truce is over, as your life will be before sunset today. But the life of your men will be spared if you return Princess Andrea to me.”

I gasped at the absurdity of Father’s assumption. Don Julián’s voice, clear and steady, rang out. “Don Andrés, I hear in your words the fear for your daughter, and I excuse your anger. But your fear is misplaced. Princess Andrea is our guest, not our prisoner. She is free to go. And my offer for peace still stands. You are right to say my life is in your hands, but we both know that if you kill me today, our kingdoms will go to war and many more lives will be lost. I only ask that you meet with me. If my proposal fails to convince you, my life will still be yours.”

“Agreed,” Father said after a slight hesitation. “But first you must set my daughter free.”

“That was always my intention,” Don Julián replied. And turning to me, he ordered, “Leave us now, Princess Andrea. Don Andrés awaits.” His voice, cold and impersonal, hit me like a slap in the face.

“No!” I shouted and the air felt thick in my lungs, as if I were breathing through mud.

Don Julián stared at me. “Goodbye, Princess,” he whispered, softly now. But his eyes ablaze in his pale face were asking me to stay.

“Sire. I cannot go. Mother...”

The unfinished sentence trailed between us. Mother had ordered me to bring Don Julián safe to his men. And right now he was far from safe. I had to find a way to stay.

“You must go!”

A hand grabbed me from behind, and Don Alfonso’s voice, tense and harsh, hissed in my ear, “Come on, Princess Andrea. Don Andrés is getting impatient. You must leave.”

“I will take care of myself, Princess. I promise,” Don Julián said, and as the shadow of a smile crossed his face, he added, “My brother will help.”

“Goodbye,Your Majesty,” I said with a deep curtsy.

“Goodbye, Princess. And... thank you.”

I walked away, the ground swaying under my feet like the river had the night before, under the hull. As I passed by Don Julián’s men, I could feel their eyes on me and hear the rushing of their feet as they got up, closing ranks to protect their king.

In front of me, across the clearing, Father was waiting. I knew that my case did not look good from his point of view. Not only had I left the castle in time of war, but I had managed to be captured by the enemy as well. By the time I reached his side, my knees were trembling so violently, I hardly managed to kneel to him.

Without a word, Father helped me to get up and, drawing me closer to him, raised his hand to the front of my tunic. Blood remained on his fingers when he took them away. He looked at my clothes still covered with Don Julián’s.

Pushing me aside, Father moved forward.

“Father! Wait!” I called after him. “It’s not–”

But he wasn’t listening.

“Don Julián!” he shouted. “You claim good will toward my daughter, and yet you have hurt her. Only a coward would do such a thing. To defend my honor, I challenge you to single combat until one party dies.”

As he spoke, the wall of Suavian soldiers parted, and a figure dressed in black emerged through the opening. Raising his sword in formal salute, Don Alfonso stepped forward. “Don Andrés, your challenge has been heard and accepted.” His voice, deep and firm, reached us across the opening. “To the death.”

Father’s hand moved to his sword. “The challenge was to the king,” he said. And in his anger, the old scar on his right cheek started throbbing–the scar Don Alfonso’s father had cut on his face so long ago.

Don Alfonso did not falter. “Your Majesty,” he said, and there was confidence in his voice, “you are speaking to him.” After returning his sword to his scabbard, he took a folded paper from his belt and handed it to a soldier who had materialized by his side.

I moved back as the man came forward with the paper in his hands and the night all around him. Father took the letter and started reading. But I couldn’t hear his words, because in my head another voice was talking, the voice of another king. “The second one, Princess, is for my people,” Don Julián had told me two nights past in the castle. “It names my brother Don Alfonso as king of Suavia to avoid confrontations among my lords, were I to die before reaching Don Andrés.”

Inside me something broke into a thousand pieces, each of them hurting like a stabbing knife, and the pain was so intense I thought I would die. Barely able to stand, I stumbled toward the closest tree and, gasping for air, leaned against its rugged trunk.

I could still hear voices and see people moving, but they were just images and noises my brain could no longer process. Instead memories flew through me.

I saw Don Julián, his clothes red in blood, sentencing me to death.

I saw Mother’s stern face as she announced, “If he dies, I will not recognize you as my daughter.”

I saw Tío Ramiro standing by the arch. “Take care of him, Andrea,” he was saying. “You are responsible for his life.”

Suddenly I was on the boat again, and Don Julián was lying at my feet bleeding. Mother and Tío were looking at me from the bridge. I wanted to warn them that the bridge was on fire, but I had no voice. “You have failed, Andrea. Don Julián is dead,” Mother was saying.

“No!” I shouted, but when I looked back at Don Julián to prove she was wrong, he was not there anymore. Instead I saw Mother and Tío sitting on velvet chairs.

“You have failed, Andrea,” Mother repeated. “Don Julián is dead, and his death was in vain. You didn’t stop the war.”

“You should have tried harder,” my uncle added.

At the sound of metal against metal, the images disappeared, and I found myself standing alone under the trees by the edge of the clearing. In front of me, inside the opening, the black soldiers from Suavia and the blue ones from our kingdom had come together into a circle. I noticed at once that they were unarmed.

Feeling strangely detached, as if somebody else were in charge of my actions, I moved toward the weapons the soldiers had placed into a pile, sampling the bows until I found one that fit my arm. A quiver with arrows slung on my back, I walked to the line of men and pushed my way into the circle.

In the middle of the field, two knights were fighting. The one in black was Don Alfonso. But his opponent, even though he was wearing the coat of arms of Montemaior embroidered on the white stripe of his long tunic, was not Father. He was taller, for one, and slimmer, and slightly awkward with the sword. A sinking feeling in my stomach told me it was John.

John who, letting out a cry of war, thrust his blade at Don Alfonso–and missed. Losing his balance, he fell on one knee while the king, ready to strike, jumped forward. With steady hands I raised my bow, and once again the arrow came alive in my hands. Then free like a bird, it flew through the air straight to its target: Don Alfonso’s feet. The tip of his sword still on John’s chest, Don Alfonso looked up, startled.

Another arrow already notched to the bow, I aimed again. This time at his heart.

 


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Читайте в этой же книге: A Broken Dream | The Forbidden Lands | The New World | The Spanish Missions | The Engagement 1 страница | The Engagement 2 страница | The Engagement 3 страница | The Engagement 4 страница | The Time Reader | A Ghost from the Past |
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